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Hey all,I have a quick question for you guys. I'm a 2L on a secondary journal at a t-14 school. My editor just told me that I have a good chance of getting my note published, but that it will be very time consuming next year. My question to you guys-- is publication really important? I already have a summer SA position.Gracias!

Anonymous User wrote:Hey all,I have a quick question for you guys. I'm a 2L on a secondary journal at a t-14 school. My editor just told me that I have a good chance of getting my note published, but that it will be very time consuming next year. My question to you guys-- is publication really important? I already have a summer SA position.Gracias!

Yes, I had a ton of firms (I'm on an odd schedule, so I interviewed at OCI after publication) and judges mention it and ask me about it. Even if you aren't sure you ever want to leave your summer SA firm, it looks good already having stuff in the publications section of the firm bio.

Eh. Do it if you want. None of those with fed clerkships from my school were published. Grades trump all... at most the publication is a nice talking point for interviews as the previous poster said. Getting a note published is a lot different than actually submitting and getting an article published.

getting an article published, or getting something published in a non-home journal - such a big deal?I know someone with poor grades got her 'note' published in a third-tier law school's secondary journal. It has not helped her get a job.

Yeah, I can see how publication might be a slight bump if it's Law Review (however, even then, there are a number of people at my school who have clerkships with Supreme Court feeder judges, and never got published). But for a secondary journal? I kind of doubt it.